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Greek Orthodox Icons of Saints
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Greek Orthodox Icons of Saints
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Greek Orthodox Icons of Saints | A set of 4 small Orthodox icons | Made in Russia

bySacred Art
275 sales
$60.80 
(was $76.00)
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You Save:$15.20
20% off

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About this item
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  • Lithography print on wood
  • Silver and gold foiled
  • Handcrafted
  • Size of each is 7×6×1 cm (ca. 3 × 2¼ × ½ inches)
  • Made in Russia
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Item description from the seller
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This is a set of 4 small Greek Orthodox icons handcrafted on wood, gold and silver foiled. A perfect Christian gift for a spiritual person. SAVE with this discounted set of matching icons of the Four Greek Saints. 

1. Gregory the Theologian = Saint Gregory the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople, a great Father and teacher of the Church, was born into a Christian family of eminent lineage in the year 329, at Arianzos (not far from the city of Cappadocian Nazianzos). His father, also named Gregory (January 1), was Bishop of Nazianzus. 

2. Paisios of the Mount Athos - Elder Paisios of the Holy Mountain was born on July 25th, 1924 in the village of Farasa in Cappadocia of Asia Minor. Elder Paisios was baptized by St. Arsenios of Cappadocia and named Arsenios, after the Holy Father. When he was about a month old, he and his family with St. Arsenios were relocated to northern Greece as part of the population exchange between Greece and Turkey. 

3. Nectarios of Aegina - When we think of saints, we often think of people who lived centuries ago. St. Nektarios, on the contrary, lived and died in the earlier part of the twentieth century. Born in Selyvria, Thrace (part of present-day Turkey), in October of 1846 as Anastasios Kephalas, Nektarios (his ordained name) began working and studying in Constantinople at age 14. Six years later he traveled to the island of Chios and entered a monastery. From there, he went to serve under Patriarch Sophronios, of Alexandria, Egypt.

4. Gregory Palamas - The 14th century was the time of the Palamite controversy in the Eastern Church. St Gregory Palamas (1296–1359), a monk of Mount Athos, was a practitioner of the method of prayer called hesychasm (hesychia means ‘silence’). This method of prayer is centered in the continuous repetition of the name of Jesus, usually in the form of the Jesus Prayer: “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”

 

 

 

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Listed on 7 March, 2023